Artist's albums
For Your Love
2001 · album
Pigestemmer
2001 · single
Wild Child
1973 · album
Tameless
1998 · album
Run Rose (Live)
1996 · single
Black Angel
1995 · album
Where Have All the Flowers Gone
1995 · single
25
1993 · album
Månebarn
1992 · album
Gadens Dronning
1990 · album
Ild Og Frihed
1989 · album
Sangen For Livet
1988 · album
Kejserens Nye Klæder
1986 · album
VI Kæmper For At Sejre
1984 · album
En Vugge Af Stål
1982 · album
Solen Var Også Din
1978 · album
Homeless
2019 · album
Harassing
2018 · single
Woman
2017 · single
Roots of the Wasteland
2014 · album
Love and Freedom
2012 · album
Dødens Triumf
2010 · album
Universal Daughter
2007 · album
I Hear Them Coming (radio edit)
2007 · single
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Biography
One of the most well-known rock groups from Continental Europe, Denmark's Savage Rose recorded a wealth of intriguing and eclectic progressive rock in the late '60s and '70s. In their early work, one hears faint echoes of the Airplane, Doors, Pink Floyd, and other psychedelic heavyweights combined with classical jazz and Danish-Euro folk elements. Their arrangements rely heavily on an incandescent, watery organ that sounds like nothing so much as psychedelic aquarium music. The most striking aspect of the band's sound, however, was the vocals of lead singer Annisette. Her childish wispy and sensual phrasing can suddenly break into jarring, almost histrionic wailing, like a Janis Joplin with Yoko Ono-isms, and eerily foreshadows Kate Bush's style. Stars in their native land, Savage Rose also achieved a bit of underground success abroad, and several of their albums were released in North America. Between 1968 and 1978, the group released nine albums, moving from vaguely psychedelic rock and the heavily gospel-influenced Refugee to the nearly classical ballet score Dodens Triumf and the folky, nearly all-Danish Solen Var Ogsa Din (their first eight albums were sung entirely in English). Always a radical band -- the Black Panthers even invited the group to play at a benefit for Bobby Seale after hearing one of Savage Rose's records -- they took the extremely radical step of withdrawing from the studio entirely by the end of 1970s to focus on using their music to support leftist political causes. Although they continued to make music and perform, they were often heard at benefits and free concerts, actually playing in Lebanese hospitals, schools, and refugee camps at the P.L.O.'s invitation. They eased back into recording in the early '80s with Danish-language efforts on small labels, eventually getting back into the mainstream music business with established distribution. Their mid-'90s album, Black Angel, was their first English-language recording in many years, and a substantial Danish hit. By this time the only remaining members from the original band were Thomas Koppel and Annisette (now his wife); Koppel also records and composes symphonic music as a solo artist. ~ Richie Unterberger, Rovi